Abstract

Studies on human cell hybrids of a cervical carcinoma cell line, HeLa, and normal fibroblasts have indicated that the tumorigenicity of these cells is under the control of a putative tumor suppressor on chromosome 11, although the nature of this suppressor remains unknown. We examined the expression of caveolin-1, a protein component of caveolae of the plasma membrane in these cell hybrids. The non-tumorigenic cell hybrid, CGL1, and normal fibroblast WI38 cells expressed 21-24 kDa caveolin-1, whereas in tumorigenic hybrid CGL4 as well as in the parental HeLa cells, the level of caveolin-1 was markedly reduced. Caveolin-1 expression was also reduced in gamma-ray-induced tumorigenic clones (GIMs) isolated from CGL1 cells, whereas non-tumorigenic irradiated cells expressed the same level of caveolin-1 as CGL1 cells. In accordance with these changes, the cellular level of caveolin-1 mRNA was reduced in the tumorigenic CGL4 cells and GIMs without any detectable changes in the caveolin-1 gene. However, the in vivo tumor growth of CGL4 cells was not altered when caveolin-1 was stably overexpressed through the transfection of a human caveolin-1 cDNA. These results suggest that reduction of caveolin-1 expression is necessary but not sufficient for emergence of the tumorigenic phenotypes of HeLa cell hybrids. Possible roles of the putative tumor suppressor in the control of gene expression are also discussed.

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